Inception (Two-Disc Edition) [Blu-ray] Reviews
Inception (Two-Disc Edition) [Blu-ray]
- Condition: New
- Format: Blu-ray
- AC-3; Color; Dolby; Widescreen; Subtitled; DTS Surround Sound
Acclaimed filmmaker Christopher Nolan directs an international cast in this sci-fi actioner that travels around the globe and into the world of dreams. Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) is the best there is at extraction: stealing valuable secrets inside the subconscious during the mind’s vulnerable dream state. His skill has made him a coveted player in industrial espionage but also has made him a fugitive and cost him dearly. Now he may get a second chance if he can do the impossible: inception,
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Are you looking for ALL the special features?,
If you want to read a review of the film itself, just google “inception review” and take your pick. Ebert gave it four stars. Do you really want to read yet another Amazon user’s opinion? This review is for people who already know they want the film, but are wondering which edition to buy.
If you’re only interested in the film, buy whichever one you can find cheapest. There is not currently an extended edition or director’s cut available. If, however, you’re interested in the special features, you’re sort of between a rock and a hard place. Here’s why:
1. The single-disc Blu-ray edition has a pathetic 12 minutes of special features–the same ones included on the single-disc DVD edition, and they’re not even in high-def.
2. The “two-disc” Blu-Ray edition is actually three discs: two Blu-rays and one DVD. If you see it listed as “two-disc” some places and “three-disc” or “combo pack” others, they’re the same thing. The first Blu-ray is the film along with an option that gives you behind-the-scenes content as it plays (cleverly named “extraction mode”). The second Blu-ray is just special features–but NOT the ones on the single-disc Blu-ray or DVD. The third disc is a standard-def DVD, but NOT the same DVD you get when you buy it separately–this DVD is a “rental” edition which has NO special features of any kind, and–get this–it doesn’t even have a scene index. The “digital copy” is actually a code printed on a paper insert to download the film from the internet. Also, some of the 2/3-disc editions come in a lenticular slip cover, but not all.
3. The standard-def DVD is a single disc with the same 12 minutes of special features on the single-disc Blu-ray.
4. There’s also a hard-to-find, two-disc, standard-def DVD edition. Unfortunately I haven’t seen it in person and I don’t know for sure what’s on either disc, other than the film of course. My guess is the second disc is a special features disc like that included in the 2/3-disc Blu-ray edition. I’m just wondering if the first disc is the “rental” edition or the single-disc DVD edition.
5. Best Buy’s exclusive edition is the same as the 2/3-disc Blu-ray edition, but with the added bonus of Christopher Nolan’s script/notes.
6. FYE’s exclusive edition comes in a “steelbook” case.
7. The limited edition comes in a scale replica of the briefcase used in the film. It’s the same 2/3-disc edition but also includes mini-posters, a couple of booklets (I believe one is the script and the other is the shared dreaming device’s “user manual,” which is online at pasivdevice.org) and Cobb’s totem.
I gave a rating of three stars because it seems you can’t get all the special features without buying two editions, and that’s incredibly lame.
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|“Life could be a dream…”,
On the surface Inception seems to be a crime caper, complete with master of disguise Eames (Tom Hardy), planner Aridane (Ellen Page), point man Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), and master thief Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio). But it’s so much more than that, taking place in dreams within dreams within dreams.
Inception, like Total Recall and The Matrix, is about perception. The audience is never sure what reality is because the protagonist isn’t sure what’s real. There are clues providing evidence for the real/not real theories, but the best movies of this type don’t come down on one side or another. Total Recall ultimately had enough clues indicating the “right” way. The Matrix stumbled after it made it clear that reality was fiction, thereby losing an audience who enjoyed the tantalizing mystery. Like so many mysteries, once the truth was revealed it wasn’t quite as exciting as we all hoped. Inception wisely avoids providing answers.
Inception is also a thought experiment. The central conceit of Inception is that once you put a thought in someone’s head it’s like a virus, incapable of being removed. In fact, attempting to not think about the idea causes the mind to just focus on it more. This concept, a key tenet of neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), is part of how our brains are wired. Director Chris Nolan knows exactly what he’s doing when the characters explain the premise. It is the key argument between Cobb and his wife Mal (Marion Cotillard): is this life just a dream?
Once you get it into your head as to which of them is right, Inception burrows into your psyche and you see all the evidence you need to reinforce the idea. There are enough discrepancies to suspect that Cobb’s stuck in a dream, but there are enough rules defining reality that indicate otherwise. Unless, of course, you believe that Cobb is fooling himself by making up said rules to convince himself he’s not in a dream when he actually is. If that sounds confusing, Inception’s done its job.
Inception is a little too long in places, testing the viewer’s patience as it delves four levels deep into the subconscious, each with different timeframes, settings, and plots. Part of the fun is watching the movie again to look for clues that reinforce what we secretly thought we knew all along.
Me? I’m convinced I know the truth. But then maybe Inception put that idea in my head.
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|Don’t dream it’s over,
Thank god there was one movie this summer not based on a comic book, a previous movie, television show, Disney ride, or candy wrapper. You actually had to invest some functioning brain activity to follow the plot and keep up with four simultaneous finales going on at the same time within different dream levels. And the ending was open to your own feelings or interpretation. Was he still in a dream or not? If you were still on board and paying attention, you may have noticed Leonardo’s character didn’t really care at that point, so why should we? It was a fun ride.
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